▎ 摘 要
The adsorption of pollutant gases (CO, CO2, SO2 and H2S) onto Fe-doped graphene nanosheets (FeG) is studied on the basis of density functional theory calculations at the PBE/Def2-SVP level of theory. The most stable adsorption configurations, binding characteristics, electronic properties and stability at room temperature of the FeG-Gas interactions is fully analyzed. The gas molecules are chemisorbed onto FeG with adsorption energies in the range of 0.54-1.8 eV, with an enhanced adsorption strength compared to intrinsic graphene. The stability of the FeG-Gas interactions is dominated by Lewis-acid-base interactions, and its strength is sorted as SO2 > CO > H2S > CO2. The adsorption stability is also retained at room temperature (300 K). Due to the strong interaction of SO2, CO, and H2S, FeG could catalyze or activate these gas molecules, suggesting the possibility of FeG as a catalyst substrate. The electron acceptor/donor character of CO, CO2, SO2 and H2S molecules when adsorbed onto FeG causes charge transfer processes that are responsible for the change in conductance of FeG; thus, the response of the HOMO-LUMO gap of FeG under gas adsorption could be useful for sensing applications. Furthermore, the analysis of the co-adsorption in O-2 environments shows that the CO2 interaction turns unstable onto FeG, while the sensing response towards H2S is suppressed. Finally, these results give new insights into the emerging applications of Fe-doped graphene in gas capture/filtration devices, solid-state gas sensors or as a catalyst substrate. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.